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Iraq
Still no proof of death of al-Qaeda in Iraq chief
2007-05-03
The Iraqi government and its tribal allies were scouring dangerous territory on Wednesday for evidence to prove their claims that al-Qaeda's Iraq chief had been killed in a clash between armed factions. Brigadier General Abdel Karim Khalaf, the Interior Ministry's operations director, admitted Iraq has still not acquired any body or human remains to back up intelligence reports that Abu Ayyub al-Masri is dead. "So far we don't yet have it, but there are efforts under way to look for the body," said Khalaf, whose claim 24 hours earlier that al-Masri had been killed was scorned by al-Qaeda and treated with caution by his United States allies.

A coalition of Sunni tribes that has vowed to defeat al-Qaeda has claimed responsibility for al-Masri's alleged death, claiming that they tracked him to an area just north of Baghdad on Tuesday and killed him in a dawn ambush. "We have evidence and eyewitnesses and our contacts with the tribes there all confirm the killing," said Hamid al-Hayis, head of the Anbar Salvation Council, the armed wing of the Anbar Awakening, an alliance of sheikhs.

Al-Hayis said finding proof of the deaths of al-Masri and a small group of fellow al-Qaeda militants is proving difficult, because the orchards and villages of the Nibae area near Taji are still partly controlled by insurgents. "The area is still under their control; early this morning we sent an armed group to scout the situation, but we haven't heard back from them yet," he said in a telephone interview.

According to US commanders, al-Masri -- who is said to be a veteran Egyptian jihadi and car-bomb expert -- took control of al-Qaeda's Iraqi franchise in June last year after the death of his predecessor, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Since then, he has been reported killed or wounded several times, and Tuesday's new report has been greeted with caution by the US military. "I am still not aware of any evidence or presentation of remains or anything like that," US spokesperson Lieutenant Colonel Chris Garver said. "We are conducting dialogue with our Iraqi counterparts." Al-Qaeda scornfully dismissed the claim in an internet message.
Posted by:Fred

#1  If he's not dead, then I think he should prove it. He should come in to Baghdad's Firdos Square and stand there on the statue base and show us.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-05-03 07:50  

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